Arturs Ligers
Karolinska Institutet
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Featured researches published by Arturs Ligers.
Genes and Immunity | 2001
Arturs Ligers; Natalia Teleshova; Thomas Masterman; Wen-Xin Huang; Jan Hillert
CTLA-4, expressed mainly on activated T cells, helps maintain, through its inhibitory function, immune-system homeostasis. Polymorphisms in the CTLA-4 gene (CTLA4) are known to be important in several autoimmune diseases, including multiple sclerosis (MS). Here, we have performed genotyping for CTLA4 polymorphisms, and investigated expression by peripheral blood mononuclear cells of CTLA-4 mRNA and protein, in patients with MS and myasthenia gravis and in healthy controls. Expression levels for mRNA and protein were similar in the patient and control groups; however, there was a clear relationship between genotype and CTLA-4 expression. Specifically, individuals carrying thymine at position −318 of the CTLA4 promoter (T−318) and homozygous for adenine at position 49 in exon 1 showed significantly increased expression both of cell-surface CTLA-4 after cellular stimulation and of CTLA-4 mRNA in non-stimulated cells. The association was seen most clearly for unsorted CD3+ cells and was absent in the CD8+ subset. The T−318 allele has been shown to be negatively associated with susceptibility to MS in an earlier study by our group. Thus, we propose that the susceptibility-influencing role of CTLA4 in MS may be related to genotypically conditioned promoter function, whereby high gene expression may decrease the risk of disease.
Annals of Neurology | 2000
Thomas Masterman; Arturs Ligers; Tomas Olsson; Magnus Andersson; Olle Olerup; Jan Hillert
To date, more than a dozen studies have investigated the role of HLA genes in determining clinical course and disease severity in multiple sclerosis (MS); in each of these studies, however, patient sample size has been small, and no consistent pattern has emerged from the results. For the present study, we determined HLA class II genotypes and catalogued clinical and demographic data for a total of 948 patients, making our data set the largest ever used to investigate HLA genes in MS. Our goals were both to investigate the impact of HLA‐DRB1 alleles on clinical course and disease severity in MS and to compare the frequencies of the established susceptibility allele DR15 in various clinicodemographic subgroups of MS patients. We found that, in addition to DR15, DR17 is positively associated with susceptibility to MS; that none of the HLA‐DRB1 alleles influences course or outcome in MS; that carriers of DR15 are prone to MS development at an earlier age than noncarriers; and that differences in DR15 positivity rates, after stratification for diagnostic category and examination results, seem to reflect a gradient of phenocopy contamination, with rates increasing in proportion to the degree of clinical or paraclinical verification of the MS diagnosis. Ann Neurol 2000;48:211–219
Journal of Neuroimmunology | 1999
Arturs Ligers; Chun Xu; Susanne Saarinen; Jan Hillert; Olle Olerup
We have investigated whether three intragenic polymorphisms of the CTLA-4 gene, a C/T base exchange in the promoter (p.-318), an A/G substitution in exon 1 (p.49) and a dinucleotide repeat polymorphism in exon 4 (p.642), were associated with genetic susceptibility to multiple sclerosis (MS). We observed a significant association (p < 0.05) for homozygosity for the G49 allele in a case-control analysis of 378 MS patients and 237 controls, and a transmission disequilibrium (p < 0.02) for the G49 allele in 31 MS families. This was further corroborated by evidence for linkage by the affected pedigree member (APM) analysis (p < 0.0002) and a transmission distortion (p < 0.05) of the exon 4(642) polymorphism. Sequencing of the promoter, the first and second exons and the parts of the first intron revealed no further polymorphisms. Our results suggest that a dysregulation of CTLA-4-driven downregulation of T-cell activation could be involved in the pathogenesis of MS.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2001
Arturs Ligers; David A. Dyment; Cristen J. Willer; A. Dessa Sadovnick; George C. Ebers; Neil Risch; Jan Hillert
The importance of the HLA-DR locus to multiple sclerosis (MS) susceptibility was assessed in 542 sib pairs with MS and in their families. By genotyping 1,978 individuals for HLA-DRB1 alleles, we confirmed the well-established association of MS with HLA-DRB1*15 (HLA-DRB1*1501 and HLA-DRB5*0101), by the transmission/disequilibrium test (chi2=138.3; P<.0001). We obtained significant evidence of linkage throughout the whole data set (mlod=4.09; 59.9% sharing). Surprisingly, similar sharing was also observed in 58 families in which both parents lacked the DRB1*15 allele (mlod=1.56; 62.7% sharing; P=.0081). Our findings suggest that the notion that HLA-DRB1*15 is the sole major-histocompatibility-complex determinant of susceptibility in northern-European populations with MS may be incorrect. It remains possible that the association of MS with HLA-DRB1*15 is due to linkage disequilibrium with a nearby locus and/or to the presence of disease-influencing allele(s) in DRB1*15-negative haplotypes.
Journal of Neuroimmunology | 2002
Thomas Masterman; Arturs Ligers; Zhiping Zhang; Dennis Hellgren; Hugh Salter; Maria Anvret; Jan Hillert
Cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated antigen-4 (CTLA-4), expressed on activated T cells, binds to B7 molecules on antigen-presenting cells. Signaling via CTLA-4 results in downregulation of ongoing T-cell clonal expansion. A single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in exon 1 of CTLA4 is associated with susceptibility to several autoimmune diseases, including multiple sclerosis (MS). In this two-stage study, we investigated whether haplotypes composed of exon 1-SNP alleles and alleles of a promoter-region SNP influence age at onset, disease severity and disease course in MS. In stage 1, deviations in CTLA4 haplotype frequencies were observed in patients subgrouped by course; in stage 2, none of these original associations were confirmed.
Journal of Neuroimmunology | 1999
Pierre Fiten; Koen Vandenbroeck; Bénédicte Dubois; Els Van Coillie; Inge Nelissen; Jo Van Damme; Arturs Ligers; Jan Hillert; Magnus Andersson; Tomas Olsson; Ghislain Opdenakker
Monocyte chemotactic protein 3 (MCP-3) is a chemokine that attracts mononuclear cells, including monocytes and lymphocytes, the inflammatory cell types that predominate in multiple sclerosis lesions. We studied the possible association between the presence of a CA/GA microsatellite repeat polymorphism in the promoter/enhancer region of the MCP-3 gene and the occurrence of multiple sclerosis. DNA samples from 192 Swedish multiple sclerosis (MS) patients and 129 healthy controls were analysed by an automated fluorescent technique. In the whole sample population, five MCP-3 allele variants (MCP-3*A1 to MCP-3*A5) were detected with an allele frequency ranging between 0.3% and 46%. The individual MCP-3 allele frequencies did not differ significantly between MS patients and control individuals. The relative MS risk, attributable to HLA-DRB1*15 was 3.05 (chi2 = 22.25, p < 0.0001). The phenotype frequency (PF) of none of the MCP-3 alleles was significantly altered in the population of controls versus unselected MS patients. When MS patients and control subjects were stratified according to positivity for HLA-DRB1*15, the MCP-3*A4-associated risk for developing MS decreased to 0.36 (p = 0.011). In the stratified groups of patients who were negative for both HLA-DRB1*15 and HLA-DRB1*03, and hence possessed a lower risk to develop MS, the MCP-3*A2-associated risk for MS development decreased significantly (p = 0.018). We conclude that the MCP-3*A4 allele might protect against MS development on the background of the increased risk in HLA-DRB1*15+ individuals and the MCP-3*A2 allele seems protective in low-risk individuals, who are both negative for DRB1*03 and DRB1*15.
Journal of Neuroimmunology | 1998
A. Fogdell-Hahn; Arturs Ligers; M. Grønning; Jan Hillert; Olle Olerup
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a presumed autoimmune disease of the central nervous system, shown to be associated with the HLA class II haplotype DRB1*15,DQB1*06. Carrying the HLA class II haplotype DRB1*15,DQB1*06 increases the risk of MS by 3.6. By adopting a polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based typing technique for HLA class I and class II genes, 200 Swedish MS patients and 210 Swedish healthy controls were analysed for their HLA alleles. Additional HLA class I alleles that increase and decrease the genetic susceptibility to MS were identified. The HLA-A*0301 allele increases the risk of MS (odds ratio=2.1) independently of DRB1*15,DQB1*06. HLA-A*0201 decreases the overall risk (odds ratio= 0.52) and the presence of A*0201 reduces the risk of MS for DRB1*15,DQB1*06 carriers from 3.6 to 1.5. Our findings are the first to identify a major modulating effect of HLA class I alleles on the susceptibility to a human autoimmune disease; a phenomenon that has previously only been observed in animal models.
Tissue Antigens | 2000
Anna Fogdell-Hahn; Arturs Ligers; M. Grønning; Jan Hillert; Olle Olerup
Neurogenetics | 2001
David A. Dyment; Cristen J. Willer; Beverly Scott; Holly Armstrong; Arturs Ligers; Jan Hillert; Donald W. Paty; Stanley A. Hashimoto; Virginia Devonshire; John Hooge; Lorne F. Kastrukoff; Joel Oger; Luanne M. Metz; Sharon Warren; Walter Hader; Cristopher Power; Anthony Auty; Avindra Nath; Robert Nelson; Mark S. Freedman; Donald G. Brunet; John E. Paulseth; G. P. A. Rice; Paul O'Connor; Pierre Duquette; Yves Lapierre; Gordon S. Francis; Jean-Pierre Bouchard; John T. Murray; Virender Bhan
European Journal of Immunogenetics | 1997
Arturs Ligers; Bing He; Anna Fogdell-Hahn; Olle Olerup; Jan Hillert